Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

Soon-to-be brides embrace their tattoos

Many touching up ink, not concealing it, for wedding day

- By Lilly Dancyger

When I started getting larger, more visible tattoos, several people asked me, “What about your wedding?” — before I’d even met my now-husband. I always looked at them as if they’d asked, “What about potato salad?” I was unclear on what the two topics had to do with each other.

In many cultures around the world, temporary henna tattoos are a long-standing bridal tradition. But even as permanent tattoos become increasing­ly common and accepted, there’s still a pervasive idea in Western culture that to be a beautiful bride, a woman must be unmarked.

And as with any backward and oppressive idea about how women should behave, there are hordes of us who delight in flouting the supposed contradict­ion between tattoos and a fairy-tale bridal glow. The hashtag #tattooedbr­ide appears nearly 21,000 times on Instagram, and there are pages and pages of beautiful, inked-up brides on Pinterest.

When I was planning my wedding in 2015, trying to hide my tattoos never crossed my mind. In fact, I had the back of my dress lowered two inches so it would better frame my back piece. And I took it a step further, getting one tattoo touched up and another covered up with a new design in preparatio­n for the big day — a trip to the tattoo parlor on the same list as a teeth whitening and a haircut. My tattoos are important to me in my everyday life, so it only made sense that they’d be important on this big day in which everything seemed to have added significan­ce.

The giant red rose on my back is a memorial tattoo for my cousin, Sabina Rose, who died when she was 20 and I was 21. If she’d been alive, there’s no question she would have been my maid of honor, and she was on my mind a lot as the wedding approached. She wasn’t there to make lists and scroll through Etsy with me, and she wouldn’t be there when my best friends and I went to get our hair styled and our nails done together. But she would be there, inked into my skin, and making the red of that rose’s petals as bright as possible felt like a small way to involve her in the flurry of wedding preparatio­n.

Katie Wudel, a digital media editor based in Los Angeles, got her tattoo of a peacock feather touched up before her wedding for similar reasons. The tattoo has several meanings for Wudel, as they so often do, but a main one is the remembranc­e of her mother, whom she lost at a young age.

“It was a way of bringing my mother into the festivitie­s,” she says.

She also had practical reasons for her touch-up, since her feather tattoo doesn’t include any black ink, so it tends to fade especially quickly. “I wanted every detail to be visible in photograph­s!” she says.

Kalia Hotchkiss, a tattoo artist based in Chisholm, Minn., says she does work for brides “all the time,” estimating about 50 a year in the lead-up to wedding season. “It’s important for brides to feel complete and perfect for their wedding day,” she says. “I have brides who come in for touch-ups just to brighten their color before the big day so everything looks crisp and fresh and as vivid as possible.”

In addition to brightenin­g up the rose on my back, I also got brand-new morning glories on the back of my neck, to cover up an old tattoo that I’d long planned to alter or cover. It didn’t come out quite right to begin with, and then it faded and blurred for six years, so I didn’t particular­ly want it immortaliz­ed in my wedding photos.

Dorothy Lyczek, a tattoo artist based in Brooklyn, says that cover-ups are the most common pre-wedding tattoos she does. “I’ve touched up tattoos for clients before their wedding date, but more commonly I’ve been asked to either cover or enhance an old tattoo with a design that is more decorative or floral,” she says. “A lot of clients have used their wedding as the motivation to finally fix or cover a tattoo that they’ve been planning to deal with.”

There are so many outdated and stringent ideas of what a bride is supposed to be, and so much pressure on women to change themselves to be “perfect” on their wedding day — to lose weight, fix their teeth, change their hair, plump their skin. There’s a whole industry that thrives on this pressure. Everyone wants to look good at their wedding, even the most anti-patriarcha­l feminists who’ve manage to escape internaliz­ing some of the most toxic ideas about what “looking good” means. Involving tattoos — personal, significan­t parts of our appearance­s that go against many of the more restrictiv­e ideas about beauty — is a way to hold onto some individual­ity through the mind-numbing process of wedding preparatio­n, even if we go along with some of the traditions. It’s a way to hold onto ourselves, and resist the “bridal” mold.

 ?? MILES RANNO PHOTO ?? Writer Lilly Dancyger, shown with husband Soomin at their wedding. In the West, the idea persists that to be beautiful, a bride must be unmarked.
MILES RANNO PHOTO Writer Lilly Dancyger, shown with husband Soomin at their wedding. In the West, the idea persists that to be beautiful, a bride must be unmarked.

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